Below
is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in) for
Hunter S. Thompson. If you have any corrections or additions, please email
us at corrections@actorsofhollywood.com.
We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.

The character of "Duke" in Garry Trudeau's "Doonesbury" comic strip is based on him.

Lived next to Don Johnson

He wounded his assistant Deborah Fuller accidentally with a shotgun whilst trying to scare a bear from his property in Aspen, Colorado, USA. 3 August 2000 - cleared of criminal charges of trying to wound his assistant. [27 July 2000]

Charged for possession of child pornography and sexually assulting former pornography star Gail Palmer. An eleven hour search of his home in Woody Creek, Colorado, turned up insufficient evidence to prosecute him on either of the charges, and the DA dropped its case.

Along with Don Johnson, wrote the script for the two-hour TV movie "Bridges," a story about an unstable, former alcoholic-drug addict cop who works in L.A. with a diminuitive Latino partner and dates a mafia boss' daughter. Although rejected by NBC, they bought the script and transformed it into the series "Nash Bridges" (1996).

Married for nearly 18 years to Sandra Dawn Thompson, during which he wrote what were considered his two greatest books "Hells Angels" and "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas". During the marriage, Sandy's habit of partaking on drug and alcohol binges with her husband led to several miscarriages, and only one of her pregnancies produced a healthy child, now grown Juan Thompson. Eventually, the drugs put Hunter into a several years depressed state, fights broke out between the two, and Sandy took several beatings, some times of which she fought back and injured Hunter. When she told him she wanted a divorce, Hunter went ballistic, destroying some of her possesions and burning the manuscripts she had been writing. Sandy called the sheriff, a family friend, who sent a deputy up to her house to escort her into town. The deputy, naive to the situation, sheepishly asked Sandy if Thompson possesed any firearms, to which she truthfully replied: "Yes, 22 of them, and every one is loaded".

Since October 2000, has been penning a weekly column, "Hey Rube", for ESPN.com's Page 2.

Ran for Sheriff of Aspen, Colorado in 1969 on the Freak Power Party ticket, and narrowly lost.

Graduate of Louisville (Ky.) Male High School, class of 1955. Missed his graduation exercises because he was in jail. He later started calling himself Dr. Thompson, after purchasing a doctorate in Divinity from a church by mail order.

Appeared on a 1967 broadcast of "To Tell the Truth" (1956) when his book detailing his experiences with the "Hell's Angels" was published.

Underground cartoonist turned comics and animation historian Scott Shaw! based a recurring character in his works after Thompson: an anthropomorphic dog named "Pointer X. Toxin".

His final wishes stipulated that his body be cremated and his ashes be shot out of a cannon across his Colorado ranch. Journalist friend Troy Hooper said "He was a big fan of bonfires and explosions and anything that went bang and I'm sure he'd like to go bang as well." This finally happened on August 20, 2005, along with a big celebration, attended by Sean Penn, Johnny Depp, Lyle Lovett, and other close friends and family.

Grandson, son of his only child, Juan, was born 1998.

Wife, Anita, was 35 years younger than he was.

Shortly before his death he talked in his ESPN.com column about 'inventing' a new sport: Shotgun Golf.

He was the basis for the character Spider Jerusalem in the comic series "Transmetropolitan" by Warren Ellis and Darik Robertson

Has a song entitled "Bat Country" written after him by the band Avenged Sevenfold.

Wanted his remains to be shot out of a 150 foot long canon. The canon had to be built especially to fulfill this last wish.

Johnny Depp, who starred in two movie adaptations of Thompson's books (Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998) and _Rum Diary, The (2006)_ ), helped to fulfill his last wish.

In order to improve his writing style, he once copied F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby word for word, from start to finish.

rode a BSA A65 Lightning most notably whilst researching his seminal book Hell's Angels. Towards the end of his period with the Hell's Angels, he wrote that he was beaten up by them.

Was portrayed by Bill Murray in Where the Buffalo Roam (1980) and Johnny Depp in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998).

His favorite pastime was to load a barrel or oil drum with explosives and then shoot it from a safe distance with one of his many handguns.

After covering the 1972 Democratic Convention in Miami for Rolling Stone Magazine, Thompson went for an evening swim in the ocean to clear his head. A light tropical storm blew up, Thompson got caught in a riptide, and he was swept out to sea. He spent the rest of the night fighting to swim back to the beach, finally crawling ashore at 9:00 A.M.

His son Juan graduated from college Magna Cum Laude.

At 15 he made an electric go-kart using the engine of a washing machine.

His mother was a chronic alcoholic.

With the aid of two friends he robbed a liquor store by starting a fight with the clerks and then cleaning out the cash register in the confusion.

During his adolescence, he and two friends broke into and robbed the same Lexington (Kentucky) gas station on three consecutive nights.

Critics have often contended that his writing style noticeably declined after his wife, Sandy, divorced him.

Following high school graduation, he joined the Air Force as a condition of his parole.

When he lived in Big Sur in the early 1960s, he rode his BSA Lightning so much he was known as "The Wild One of Big Sur".

Pleaded no contest to a drunken driving charge in San Francisco in 1987.

When he lived in Big Sur in the early 1960s, his next door neighbor was Joan Baez.

When he was living in Big Sur in the early 1960s, a group of religious fanatics moved in next door. He got rid of them by nailing the head of a wild boar to their front door, and by putting its entrails in their car.

One of the most widely quoted lines from tributes and obituaries to him was from one written by Frank Kelly Rich, editor and publisher of Modern Drunkard Magazine: "There was always a powerful comfort in knowing he was out there somewhere in the night, roaring drunk, guzzling high-octane whiskey and railing against a world amok with complacency and hypocrisy."

His lifelong antipathy for Richard Nixon was known by the former president, who barred him from the White House.

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